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DISTRICT FOOTBALL: Nevada derailed by Center in district title game

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The best two-year run in recent memory came to a close for the Nevada Tigers on Friday night.

The third-seeded Tigers fell to the top-seeded Center Yellowjackets in the championship game of the Class 4 District 7 tournament, 35-13. 

In search of its first district championship since 1998, the loss marks the second consecutive season the Tigers have been derailed in the district title game. 

Led by dynamic tailback “Juice” Love, the juggernaut Yellowjackets entered the contest unblemished at 11-0. On the third play from scrimmage, senior wideout DeAndre Pruett collected a shovel pass and scampered 75 yards to paydirt. 

The Tigers were unable to generate much offense in the opening frame and fell behind 14-0 via Love’s 3-yard touchdown run late in the first quarter. 

Nevada High defensive line coach Jerrod Alexander consoles senior Gage Miller after Friday night’s loss to the Center Yellowjackets. Photo by Matt Resnick

The Yellowjackets capitalized on excellent field position late in the first half, as quarterback Joseph Vick barreled in from two yards out, staking Center to a 21-0 halftime lead.

Looking for an offensive spark, Jeremiah Johnson’s 73-yard touchdown romp early in the third was negated on a penalty. Nevada broke through near the midpoint of the quarter, as Johnson’s 5-yard rushing score and extra point trimmed the deficit to 21-7. 

The Yellowjackets replied with 13 unanswered points, punctuated by Armand Russell’s 65-yard touchdown reception. 

Decorated Tigers’ senior running back Avious Steadman found the end zone for a final time late in the fourth, accounting for the final margin. 

The Tigers’ game plan was centered on containing Love.

“We didn’t play as well as we would have liked, but Center had a lot to do with that,” said Nevada coach Wes Beachler. “We talked about their overall team speed and that we couldn’t give up big plays. I thought if we could have sustained a few drives in the first half it would have been a lot different ballgame tonight.”

The near-freezing conditions essentially forced the Tigers to abandon their passing game.

“We knew with the weather conditions it wouldn’t be a great passing night for either team,” he said, “but we had to stop the run first and go from there.” 

Nevada’s Luke Andersen looks to ratchet up the pressure on the quarterback Friday night. Photo by Matt Resnick.

Beachler lauded Nevada’s 16-member senior class for their perseverance through rocky times. The veteran coach noted that five members of the class started as freshmen, something Beachler has rarely done throughout his nearly 30-year coaching career. 

“We were 0-10 that year,” Beachler recounted. “Kids of lesser character would walk away from things that are hard and difficult. But this group rallied and continued playing with the two classes ahead of them.”

Following the aforementioned winless campaign, the Tigers reeled off 7 wins followed by back-to-back 9-3 district runner-up finishes.

“I’m just proud of the way they played and how far they brought this program,” Beachler said. “They will be sorely missed.” 

A Fort Scott High School transfer, Steadman is the program’s all-time leading rusher, having achieved the feat in less than two full seasons in the gridiron. 

Nevada quarterback Cade Beshore is tackled by Center’s Reggie Davis Friday night. Photo by Matt Resnick.

“Playing here was the best feeling I’ve ever had,” said an emotional Steadman. “I went from Fort Scott, where I didn’t really get any playing time and nobody believed in me — to Nevada, where everybody believed in me and Coach Beachler gave me a shot. I wouldn’t trade anything for it.”

In the district semifinals a week ago against Lincoln College Prep, Steadman set a single-game Nevada rushing record with 320 yards and four touchdowns.

“I think he’s a once every five to 10 years guy. He sees the field well, has great speed and also has toughness,” Beachler said. “The thing I’m most proud of is that he’s not just a pretty boy ball-carrier. He blocks and does the little things. He’s also stepped up and played safety the last couple weeks — and played that well, too. He’s an all-around good football player.”

STATE SWIMMING: Carthage advances to finals in three events at Class 1 meet

ST. PETERS, Mo. — The Carthage Tigers advanced to the finals in three events at the MSHSAA Class 1 Swimming and Diving Championships on Friday at the St. Peters Rec-Plex.

In Friday’s prelims, the top eight in each event moved on to the championship finals and those who finished ninth through 16th advanced to the consolation finals.

Carthage’s 200-yard medley relay team of Kellen Frieling, Braxton McBride, William Wright and Eli Cox finished 16th in 1:43 to advance.

The Tigers also advanced in the 400 freestyle relay, as McBride, Cox, Wright and Frieling took 16th in 3:26.

A junior, Frieling advanced to the finals of the 100-yard backstroke by finishing 16th in 55.69 seconds. Frieling also finished 32nd in the 200 freestyle. 

A sophomore, McBride finished 25th in the 50 freestyle and 28th in the 100 free. 

Monett senior Matthew Fillinger advanced to the finals of the 200 freestyle by finishing 12th in 1:48. Fillinger also finished 17th in the 100 butterfly.

The Cubs were 20th in the 200 free relay, 28th in the 400 free relay and 31st in the 200 medley relay. Monett’s Ryan Goodson finished 20th in the 50 freestyle and 23rd in the 100 free. 

Webb City’s Micah Brouwer finished 18th in the 100 breaststroke with a time of 1:03, missing a trip to the finals by two spots.

The Cardinals finished 24th in the 200 medley relay in 1:46, with Judah Ritchie, Micah Brouwer, Emiliano Vasquez and Cody Herndon swimming.

Webb City finished 31st in the 400 free relay, as Vasquez, Steve Kenlee, Brouwer and Herndon recorded a time of 3:43.

Webb City’s Maddox Wood will compete in the diving competition on Saturday. 

DISTRICT FOOTBALL: Seneca overcomes early deficit to defeat Mount Vernon for district repeat

SENECA, Mo. — The Seneca Indians fell into a 14-0 hole only 5 minutes, 10 seconds into their Class 2 District 4 championship game Friday night against the Mount Vernon Mountaineers at Tom Hodge Field / Earl Campbell Stadium.

Rather than panic and depart their game plan, the Indians held Mount Vernon off the scoreboard for the final three quarters with a dominant defensive performance and their offense scored 18 unanswered points to earn a 25-21 victory over a rival they have played six times in the postseason since 2012.

Seneca, now 10-1 on the season, will host unbeaten and District 3 champion Liberty-Mountain View (11-0) in the Class 2 state quarterfinals at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 19.

“We settled in,” Seneca coach Cody Hilburn said. “Credit to Coach (Matt) Crane and our defensive staff. They did some good stuff at halftime, settled us down and we came out and looked good in the second half.

“Our identity and everything we do…we’ve got to be physical in the run game so you can win games. When the temperatures drop, you’ve got to run the ball. We did that tonight, and we did a good job passing.

“It means a ton. Last year was special, but to repeat it and sustain this momentum we’ve got, it’s hard to do. Credit our kids for what they did in the offseason to get ourselves back here and find a way to win tonight.”

Down 21-7 after one quarter, the Indians cut their deficit to 21-13 at halftime after piecing together an 11-play, 87-yard scoring drive that ate 4:46 off the clock in the second quarter. Junior quarterback Gavyn Hoover connected with senior receiver Conner Ackerson three times on the drive, including a 28-yard play that set up Seneca with first-and-goal at the Mountaineer 10. Hoover capped off the drive with a 4-yard touchdown run.

Seneca scored all 12 points in the second half with a pair of Jackson Marrs short-yardage direct-snap TD runs on fourth-and-goal.

Marrs’ 2-yard run at 5:49 in the third made it a 21-19 score and the outstanding junior running back’s 3-yard run at 7:44 in the fourth closed out the scoring.

Defensively, Seneca held Mount Vernon to three first downs in the final three quarters and the Mountaineers’ last seven possessions resulted in punt, interception, punt, turnover-on-downs, interception, punt, and turnover-on-downs after their first three all produced touchdowns.

“We could easily have gotten out of our offensive game plan and start doing some stuff that’s not us,” Hilburn said. “We didn’t, and credit our defense for allowing that not to happen. They allowed us to stick to our game of running the football. We got ourselves back in it and found a way to win it.

“When we finally got a stop, we settled into what we were doing. We were all over the place early on. We just settled down and trusted what we’ve been taught to do. We played really well in the second half.”

The Indians started the game very shaky with bad snaps on the first two plays and a lost fumble on the second play that gave the Mountaineers the 41-yard line for the starting point of their first possession.

Two plays later, Mount Vernon sophomore quarterback Gavin Johnston broke loose for a 37-yard touchdown run.

The Indians turned it over on downs on their second possession, giving the Mountaineers an even shorter field at the Seneca 31.

Five plays later, on a fourth-and-goal, sophomore running back Braden Dodson’s 3-yard TD run made it 14-0 with 6:50 remaining in the first.

The Indians and the Mountaineers exchanged scoring drives in the latter half of the first.

Seneca’s first points came from a 34-yard touchdown pass from Hoover to fellow junior Ethan Altic at 5:04.

Mount Vernon (8-4) then put together a 9-play, 98-yard scoring drive in 3:16, highlighted by a Cody Downing 27-yard first-down run and a 43-yard first-down pass from Johnston to junior receiver Layton Pendleton.

Seneca’s performance in the final three quarters called to mind the Indians’ 13-12 district semifinal victory last season against district top seed Aurora. In that game, Seneca trailed 12-0 at halftime and scored all 13 second-half points for a thrilling, comeback victory.

The Indians are repeat district champions, and they host a state quarterfinal for the second year in a row.

DISTRICT FOOTBALL: Carthage earns district crown with win over Republic

CARTHAGE, Mo. — If a pattern of only two years can qualify as a streak, the Carthage Tigers snapped one at David Haffner Stadium on Friday night.

Carthage RB Luke Gall jump cuts to make a man miss on the way to a first-down turn in the Tigers’ district title win over Republic on Friday. Photo by Israel Perez.

With a 28-14 victory over the Republic Tigers (8-4), Carthage (10-1) claimed the Class 5 District 6 crown for the first time since 2019, a year in which the Tigers went on to win a state championship. The past two seasons, Carthage has fallen to rival Webb City in the district championship game, but will now advance to the quarterfinals next week, facing Lebanon on the road.

“It was only two years,” coach Jon Guidie said with a smile, reflecting on the night’s achievement and the previous pair of seasons. “I guess you never know how good it is. We weren’t in it for a couple years. To be able to get back to this spot and get a win over a really good football team, man, it really feels good.”

To earn their district crown, the Tigers relied heavily on senior quarterback Cooper Jadwin and the same shutdown defense they’ve gotten all year. With Air Force commit running back Luke Gall not 100% recovered from an injury that kept him out of last week’s matchup with Willard, Jadwin was unquestionably the focal point of the Tigers’ offense. He finished with 19 carries, amassing 183 yards and two touchdowns. 

Carthage QB Cooper Jadwin looks for blocking on a rush in the Tigers’ district title win over Republic on Friday. Photo by Israel Perez.

“He was determined,” Guidie said. “You talk about a kid playing with some fire. He took a load off of Luke’s shoulders tonight. He carried the load there and was able to get out some runs. It was kind of one of those nights, we felt like we just needed to work some clock and run the football and we had success doing that.”

The Carthage defense set the tone for the game, forcing Republic to go three-and-out on its first two possessions of the game, and punts on its first three drives. Republic didn’t manage a first down until within the 3:00 mark of the first quarter.

“We wanted to come out and play physical and fast,” Guidie said. “We couldn’t just play fast, we couldn’t just play physical, we had to play fast and physical and we did that up front. Kids on the back end covered those tall—they have some really nice-looking receivers out there. We did a good job in coverage, just played a physical brand of football tonight, that’s for sure.”

Not to be shown up, Gall, the two-way senior, carried the ball 18 times for 129 yards and his own pair of touchdowns. 

Carthage WR Jadason Davis-Maxey breaks a tackle for extra yardage in the Tigers’ win over Republic on Friday in the district championship. Photo by Israel Perez.

Guidie said he “wasn’t quite 100%” and that the team is hopeful he’ll continue his recovery.

“Obviously we’re going to need him down the road,” Guidie said. 

Eleven weeks ago, Carthage and Republic met to open the 2022 season, with the former securing a 56-26 victory, but Republic lost only two more matchups the rest of the season before Friday night, and reached the district title game by upsetting No. 2 seed Webb City 30-21 last week. Guidie was highly complimentary of the Tigers, coached by Ryan Cornelson. 

“We knew, and I told the coach after the game Week One, that they were going to win a lot of ball games,” he said. “We knew that they were going to be very talented, they play hard, their coach is doing a fantastic job over there, changing the culture. Those kids believe, you can see that.”

 

CARTHAGE 28, REPUBLIC 14

Republic    0    6   8   0 — 14

Carthage  14   7    7   0 — 28

CAR: Luke Gall 19 run (Mejia kick)

CAR: Cooper Jadwin 33 run (Mejia kick)

REP: James Rexroat 23 pass from Wyatt Woods (Run failed)

CAR: Jadwin 3 run (Mejia Kick)

CAR: Gall 1 run (Mejia kick)

REP: Rexroat 6 pass from Woods (Rexroat pass from Woods)

DISTRICT FOOTBALL: Lamar routs Fair Grove for district title

LAMAR, Mo. — Lamar jumped out to a commanding lead and never looked back in a 56-6 win over Fair Grove in the Class 2 District 5 title game on Friday.

The Tigers scored three times in the first quarter for a 22-0 lead and added three more scores in the second quarter for a 43-0 lead by the intermission. With the second units in to start the second half, Lamar continued to separate from Fair Grove in the second half before the Eagles got on the scoreboard in the waning minutes of the fourth quarter.

Lamar improves to 10-1 on the season and advances to the Class 2 state quarterfinal round where the Tigers hit the road for a matchup against Holden (8-3). It is the Tigers’ 14th consecutive trip to the quarterfinal round.

Lamar, which rushed for over 500 yards in the win, opened the game with the possession and marched right down the field for a touchdown when Joel Beshore broke loose for a 10-yard score with 8:04 on the clock in the first period for a 7-0 lead.

After Fair Grove punted on its first possession, the Tigers used a 37-yard run from Beshore to set up a 27-yard rushing touchdown by Terrill Davis to push the lead to 14-0 with 5:55 to play in the first quarter.

The Eagles found themselves in Lamar territory nine plays into their ensuing drive when Ian Ngugi picked off a Fair Grove pass for the game’s first turnover. 

The Tigers’ offense didn’t need long to make the most of the extra possession when Davis ripped off a 70-yard touchdown before Hunter Lundine rushed in for the following two-point conversion for a 22-0 lead with 1:57 left in the first quarter. 

Lamar picked up right where they left off in the second quarter after Beshore scrambled for a 20-yard touchdown to extend the lead to 29-0 with 10:29 left in the first half. 

After the third punt of the first half by the Eagles, the Tigers added to their lead when Ty Wilhite capped off a long drive with a 2-yard rushing score to push the margin to 36-0 with 6:01 left in the second period.

Lamar was able to get into the end zone one more time just before halftime when Cooper Haun rushed in from 3 yards out with 18 seconds on the clock before the intermission for a 43-0 lead. 

With the second units in to start the second half, Fair Grove turned it over on the first possession of the third quarter when Lamar’s Tate Ansley picked off a pass for a change of possession.

The Tigers turned the turnover into an Aiden Sheat 31-yard rushing touchdown on a jet sweep to balloon the lead to 50-0 with 9:28 left in the third quarter.

The Eagles looked like they might get on the scoreboard on the next possession only for a fumble by Brock Bruner at the end of a long reception to give the ball back to Lamar deep in its own territory.

Lamar pushed the lead to 56-0 when Logan Kish plowed in from a yard out with 11:51 left in regulation. 

Fair Grove got on the board with 3:11 left in regulation on a 4-yard reception by Maddux Smith to make the score 56-6.